Troubleshooting
Check IVTV is initialized
Run:
dmesg |grep Initialized
You should see something like:
ivtv: Initialized WinTV PVR 250, card #0 ivtv: Initialized WinTV PVR 350, card #1
This example shows two cards. If you only have one, you will see results similar to this:
ivtv: Initialized WinTV PVR 250, card #0
This is a good way to identify if the card even initially loaded.
Testing Capture
- After the driver is loaded, you can test it by doing a simple capture
cat /dev/video0 > /tmp/test_capture.mpg
Let this go for about 5 sec and then press <ctrl> + 'c'
- Attempt to play this back using your favorite media player. (mplayer for the example)
mplayer /tmp/test_capture.mpg
- See if you have some recorded content coming up in the test capture.
Poor Audio Quality on a PVR-500
If you are encountering distorted audio, this is a known issue with certain versions of the ivtv driver (and is apparent in the windows driver too). Follow the directions below on this page to upgrade to a newer version. Thanks to jlr4u for verifying that this solved the problem. If you encounter issues still, post in this thread: http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=345655
Diagnosing Problems
- Check dmesg to see if there are any errors loading firmware or anything like that.
dmesg | tac | sed -n '/=\ \ END INIT IVTV\ \ =/,/= START INIT IVTV =/p;/= START INIT IVTV =/q' | tac
If you see any errors that are not covered below, go into #ubuntu and see if you can grab some help or post on the forums.
Errors during modprobe
If you encounter errors similar to:
sudo modprobe ivtv FATAL: Error inserting ivtv (/lib/modules/2.6.17-10-generic/ivtv/ivtv.ko): Unknown symbol in module, or unknown parameter (see dmesg)
and check dmesg to see similar things to this:
[17182375.312000] ivtv: disagrees about version of symbol video_unregister_device [17182375.312000] ivtv: Unknown symbol video_unregister_device [17182375.312000] ivtv: disagrees about version of symbol video_device_alloc [17182375.312000] ivtv: Unknown symbol video_device_alloc [17182375.312000] ivtv: disagrees about version of symbol video_register_device [17182375.312000] ivtv: Unknown symbol video_register_device [17182375.312000] ivtv: disagrees about version of symbol video_device_release [17182375.312000] ivtv: Unknown symbol video_device_release [17182762.044000] ivtv: disagrees about version of symbol video_unregister_device [17182762.044000] ivtv: Unknown symbol video_unregister_device [17182762.044000] ivtv: disagrees about version of symbol video_device_alloc [17182762.044000] ivtv: Unknown symbol video_device_alloc [17182762.044000] ivtv: disagrees about version of symbol video_register_device [17182762.044000] ivtv: Unknown symbol video_register_device [17182762.044000] ivtv: disagrees about version of symbol video_device_release [17182762.044000] ivtv: Unknown symbol video_device_release
you will need to reinstall the running linux image. This can be caused by overwriting the modules necessary for ivtv to work.
Reinstall the linux image:
sudo apt-get install --reinstall linux-image-`uname -r` sudo depmod -a
Follow the steps to rebuild the modules.
Resource allocation errors
There are two possible solutions to resource allocation problems:
- Be sure that you have enabled APIC on your machine's BIOS. This will guarantee enough resources are allocated for the device.
See http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=284041 for more information.
Add vmalloc=192m to your kernel boot parameters.
First make a copy of your old grub configuration. You should do this everytime you make an edit of grub.
cp /boot/grub/menu.list /boot/grub/menu.list.backup
Edit /boot/grub/menu.lst to add the vmalloc=192 to the end of your kernel line:
title Ubuntu, kernel 2.6.17-10-server root (hd0,0) kernel /boot/vmlinuz-2.6.17-10-server root=/dev/hda1 ro quiet splash vmalloc=192m initrd /boot/initrd.img-2.6.17-10-server quiet savedefault boot